Given that, I'll proceed by replacing all words except the proper nouns. So for the text provided, "Oh Darling Yeh Hai India" is a proper noun? The user wrote it with quotes and in the task mentioned to skip proper nouns. Assuming that these titles are proper nouns and should stay. Same with actor names, director names, etc.

Next, I need to replace each non-proper noun word with three synonyms. I'll go through the text word by word. Let's take the first sentence: "Fylm Oh Darling Yeh Hai India MTRJM HNDY KAML - May Syma 1: Uncovering the Mystery". Since "Fylm" is a proper noun here (typo or variant of "Film" but stylized), maybe it's intentional. But the user says to skip proper nouns. Let's check each word. "Fylm" is probably a typo or a proper noun part of the title. So I'll leave it. "Uncovering" can be replaced with synonyms like revealing, exploring, exposing. "the" can be "this", "the", "that" but maybe better to use synonyms like "the", "the", "the" since it's an article. Wait, articles shouldn't be replaced. Wait, user wants every word with three synonyms. Hmm. Maybe they mean content words, not function words. Wait, the user said "skip proper nouns", not function words. So "the" is a function word and should be converted to synonyms. But "the" is an article, so synonyms might be "the", "a", "an"? But "the" is unique. Hmm. Maybe just use the same word? Or treat it as a function word and keep it. Wait, the user might have meant to replace all words except proper nouns. Let me read the instruction again: "switch every word with 3 synonyms in spintax: x. Skip proper nouns." So every word except proper nouns. So function words like "the", "is", "and" also need synonyms. But synonyms for "the" are tricky. Maybe use synonyms for "the" as in "this", "these", "that". For "is", maybe "is", "am", "are", but that doesn't make sense. Wait, maybe the user expects that even function words are replaced with synonyms. But that might not be possible. Alternatively, the user might mean content words (nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs) but not articles, prepositions, etc. But the instruction is unclear. To proceed, I'll assume that all words except proper nouns should be replaced, regardless of function. So even "the" would have synonyms. But how? Let me think. Maybe for "the", use "the", "the", "the" since synonyms are hard. Or maybe just keep it. But the user specified to use synonyms, so I have to find three synonyms even if they are the same. Wait, but synonyms for "the" don't exist in the same sense. Maybe the user expects to find at least one synonym. Hmm. Alternatively, maybe the user is okay with using the same word three times if no synonyms are available. That might be the safest approach.

The Access

Another thing to watch for is maintaining sentence structure. Some words might require different forms depending on their role in the sentence. For example, "impressive" might become remarkably skilled, but in the context, maybe "impressive" is just adjective like "remarkable|awe-inspiring|exceptional".

"The" → "This", "These", "This" (since "the" is an article here) "world" → "universe, realm, domain" "of" → "regarding, concerning, relating to" "Indian" → "Hindi, native, local" (but "Indian" is a proper noun? Wait, no. Wait, "Indian cinema" is a proper noun? No, "Indian" here is an adjective modifying "cinema", not a proper noun. So "Indian" is not a proper noun here. So need to replace it. Three synonyms: "Hindu, native, local"? Wait, "Indian" as in from India. So "Indian cinema" is the common term. So synonyms for "Indian" here would be "Hindu", "Indigenous", "Indian" (but maybe that's considered a proper noun). Hmm. Wait, "Indian" as an adjective can have synonyms like "Hindu", "native", or "local". But "Indian cinema" is a specific term. So perhaps "Hindu cinema", but that's a different term. This is tricky. Maybe "Indian" is a proper noun in this context? Wait, no. "Indian cinema" is a common phrase. The user said to skip proper nouns, so if "Indian" is part of a proper noun phrase like "Indian cinema", but the user meant to skip only proper nouns, not the descriptors. Since "Indian cinema" is a proper noun phrase, but "Indian" is the adjective. So maybe "Indian" should be replaced with synonyms. For example, "Indian" can be replaced with "Hindu", "native", "local". Alternatively, maybe not. Maybe "Indian" is part of a proper noun. But I think "Indian" here is not a proper noun. So proceed to replace it.

"significance, plot, cast, and impact" → "importance, storyline, ensemble, and influence"

After replacing all the non-proper nouns with three synonyms each in the spintax format, the output should be text-only without any markdown. The user also mentioned to output the text only, so avoid any explanations.